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Top cooling mattress Bear Elite Hybrid drops biggest discount in today's Memorial Day sales — just in time for summer

Top cooling mattress Bear Elite Hybrid drops biggest discount in today's Memorial Day sales — just in time for summer

Tom's Guide26-05-2025

Hot sleepers rejoice because you can now save 40% on all sizes of the cooling Bear Elite Hybrid mattress at Bear, and get two free pillows included. That brings the price of a queen down to $1,456.20 from $1,998.80.
The Bear Elite is our top-rated cooling mattress of the year, packed with specialist cooling technology such as Phase Changing Material (PCM) and copper infused foam to help keep temperatures regulated. Plus, there's also the optional upgrade to the ultra cooling Celliant cover (more on that below.)
The Memorial Day mattress sales are in full swing, knocking an extra 40% off the Bear Elite Hybrid with the code MD4TY. That's the biggest discount you'll ever get on this cooling bed, making now an excellent time to buy — just in time for summer
Bear Elite Hybrid mattress (queen): was from $2,427 now from $1,456.20 at BearMade with Phase Change Materials, copper infused foam and coils for added breathability, the Bear Elite Hybrid ranks highly in our guide to the best mattress of the year for its cooling prowess and overall comfort. In our Bear Elite Hybrid mattress review, our lead tested upgraded to a cooling Celliant cover which captures heat and converts it into infrared energy for a cool night's sleep (costing an extra $180 in today's 40% sale.) Available in three firmness options, we rate the Bear Elite as one of the best hybrid mattresses overall thanks to its suitability to most sleepers. Bear mattress sales usually hover around 30%-35% off so 40% off is an great saving. That said, MSRPs appear to have crept up slightly this month, with a queen last month costing $2,305 at MSRP vs the $2,427 today. Still, with today's discount 40% you'll still save an extra $148 on a queen today compared to last month. We don't expect to see this deal again until Black Friday in November when the hot warm summer nights will be behind us. Comes with 12 night sleep trial, limited lifetime warranty and free and fast shipping.Our review: ★★★★½ User score: ★★★★½ (based on 3,900+ reviews)
Brooklyn Bedding CopperFlex Pro (queen): was $1,332 now £932.40 at Brooklyn Bedding The Brooklyn Bedding CopperFlex Pro is a great mattress in a box option for hot sleepers with a smaller budget. It's packed with cooling technology like a cool-to-touch Phase Change Material (PCM) cover and copper infused foams. Like the Bear above, the CopperFlex Pro's hybrid construction means better breathability. You won';t get the customizable firmness options or the optional Celliant upgrade, but it kept our lead tester cool during our Brooklyn Bedding CopperFlex Pro mattress review. Today's Brooklyn Bedding mattress sale takes 30% off, bringing the queen size to $932.40 (was $1,332.) Comes with a limited lifetime warranty, 120 night sleep trial and free shipping.Our review: ★★★★ User score: ★★★★½ (based on 500+ reviews)

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But a different type has also become an essential part of the strategic contest: the 'one-way attack,' or long-range strike UAV. The most important drones of this type that first saw widespread use in Ukraine were developed by Iran, which in 2023 agreed to supply Russia with the blueprints for its Shahed-136 one-way attack drone, and to train personnel in its manufacture and employment. These drones, called the Geran-2 by Russia, can best be thought of as slow-moving cruise missiles. Their basic concept can be traced back to Hitler's V-1 buzz-bombs, a so-called 'revenge weapon' used to inflict strategically pointless but deadly area bombing on London toward the end of World War II. Those who have heard the Geran-2 in action — as has Rolling Stone's reporter — liken its engine to that of a moped, which is the nickname given it in Ukraine. One is made aware that the drone has entered its terminal trajectory and is about to impact when its engine cuts out, sending it into a steep dive — just as eyewitness accounts describe the V-1 in 1944 London, in a bizarre but fitting echo of history. Although several variants exist, in general the Geran-2 carries a warhead that weighs about 100 pounds, and navigates to its target via a pre-set route, using an inertial guidance system supplemented by GPS or its Russian equivalent, GLONASS. Russia intends to produce as many as 500 Geran-2s per day, Zelensky said in a press briefing on May 27. It has significantly expanded manufacturing in a factory near Yelabuga, Tatarstan — more than 800 miles from the front in Ukraine — which is largely staffed by Russian high schoolers and young women from Africa and Latin America imported to build drones. The factory was built in a special economic zone near the Kama River, which connects to the Volga and thereby the Caspian Sea, allowing materials to be sent directly by sea from Iran. 'Production is already much greater than what was originally planned when [the factory in] Yelabuga opened in 2023,' Bendett says. 'The Russians were originally planning to produce only several hundred per month. Now they can produce many hundreds per week.' Sanctions have bit into many aspects of the Russian economy, and were intended to limit Moscow's ability to purchase essential military and 'dual-use' electronics abroad. But they haven't stopped drone production. 'On some components, on some specific items, there's probably a bottleneck. But on others Russia has been able to establish supply chains that bypass the sanctions,' Bendett says. Ukraine, too, has gotten into the one-way attack drone business. Since January, Ukraine has been using such drones to target Russian energy and military infrastructure, with some success — but nothing like the operation on Sunday. Kyiv says it plans to domestically produce as many as 30,000 long-range strike vehicles this year. There is little data to assess the overall toll that drones are taking on the battlefield. Social media is awash with hours of snuff film of drones attacking soldiers and vehicles, and anecdotal evidence suggests that drones are now responsible for a substantial portion, perhaps even the majority, of battlefield casualties, which aligns with the Ukrainian deputy defense minister's claim of '80 percent' of all damage. To attempt to nail down accurate numbers in the midst of an ongoing conflict awash in propaganda, disinformation, and just plain lack of reliable data, is to plunge into a realm of uncertainty and confusion. When Rolling Stone visited the Severodonetsk front in June 2022, it was considered shocking that Ukrainian authorities claimed more than 100 soldiers were killed on each side per day. Now, British military intelligence routinely claims Russia loses more than 1,200 soldiers — killed and wounded — per day on average, saying 2025 was on track to be 'the costliest year of the war in terms of Russian personnel.' According to them, 960,000 Russians have become casualties in the war. Russia does not release official data on its losses. Yevgeny Prigozhin, the late head of the private military company Wagner Group who led a rebellion against Moscow in part over high casualties suffered by his men, claimed in June 2023 that 20,000 of his fighters had been killed and that at least 120,000 Russian soldiers had been slain, but the Kremlin was downplaying their losses. Zelensky said in February that 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed and 380,000 wounded, although he added that a substantial percentage of the wounded had returned to duty — that averages out to more than 350 casualties per day of conflict, although undoubtedly the number would have fluctuated over time. Other sources claim even higher losses, as many as 70,000 Ukrainians killed. Historically, casualty figures don't always correlate to victory. Suffice to say, the war in Ukraine is becoming deadlier, more complex, and increasingly intractable. There are no off-ramps in sight and no cease-fire on the horizon. The United States — the only great power capable of meaningful engagement with both combatants — may walk away from diplomacy to end the fighting altogether. President Donald Trump on May 28 said that he expects to see progress within 'two weeks' — but he said the same thing on April 27, and on May 19. In the meantime, the fighting continues. Over the weekend of May 23, another new milestone was reached: the largest aerial attack on Ukrainian cities since the start of the conflict, with more than 900 drones launched by Russia over three nights, along with ballistic and cruise missiles. Athos, who says he is '95 percent recovered' from his wounds, has been discharged from the Ukrainian military. He remains in Kyiv with his wife. They listened as drones and missiles rained down on the city. When asked if he planned to return to uniform, he says: 'No. I've had enough of getting shot at.' More from Rolling Stone Republicans Are Flat-Out Lying About Their Medicaid Cuts Trump's Pharmaceutical Tariffs Are Not the Right Solution for a Big Problem 50 Cent Pledges to Prevent a Trump Pardon for Sean Combs: 'I'm Gonna Reach Out' Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence

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